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Rhodium nanoparticle

Cao D, Wieckowski A, Inukai J, Alonso-Vante N (2006) Oxygen reduction reaction on rathe-nium and rhodium nanoparticles modified with selenium and sulfur. J Electrochem Soc 153 A869-A874... [Pg.343]

Fig.3 PVP-protected rhodium nanoparticles a TEM micrograph b HREM micrograph... Fig.3 PVP-protected rhodium nanoparticles a TEM micrograph b HREM micrograph...
A similar polymer-stabilized colloidal system is described by James and coworkers [66]. Rhodium colloids are obtained by reducing RhCls, 3H2O with ethanol in the presence of PVP. The monophasic hydrogenation of various substrates such as benzyl acetone and 4-propylphenol and benzene derivatives was performed under mild conditions (25 °C and 1 bar H2). The nanoparticles are poorly characterized and benzyl acetone is reduced with 50 TTO in 43 h. [Pg.267]

Iridium and rhodium nanoparticles have also been studied in the hydrogenation of various aromatic compoimds. In all cases, total conversions were not observed in BMI PF6. TOFs based on mol of cyclohexane formed were 44 h for toluene hydrogenation with Ir (0) and 24 h and 5 h for p-xylene reduction with lr(0) or Rh(0) nanoparticles, respectively. The cis-1,4-dimethylcyclohexane is the major product and the cisitrans ratio depends on the nature of the metal 5 1 for lr(0) and 2 1 for Rh(0). TEM experiments show a mean diameter of 2.3 nm and 2.1 nm for rhodium and iridium particles, respectively. The same nanoparticle size distribution is observed after catalysis (Fig. 4). [Pg.268]

Similarly to Iridium and rhodium nanoparticle studies, Dupont describes benzene hydrogenation in various media by platinum(O) nanoparticles prepared by simple decomposition of Pt2(dba)3 in BMI PFe at 75 °C and under 4 bar H2 [68]. The Pt nanoparticles were isolated by centrifugation and char-... [Pg.268]

The isolated Ru(0) nanoparticles were used as solids (heterogeneous catalyst) or re-dispersed in BMI PP6 (biphasic liquid-liquid system) for benzene hydrogenation studies at 75 °C and under 4 bar H2. As previously described for rhodium or iridium nanoparticles, these nanoparticles (heterogeneous catalysts) are efficient for the complete hydrogenation of benzene (TOP = 125 h ) under solventless conditions. Moreover, steric substituent effects of the arene influenced the reaction time and the decrease in the catalytic TOP 45, 39 and 18h for the toluene, iPr-benzene, tBu-benzene hydrogenation, respectively, finally. The hydrogenation was not total in BMI PPg, a poor TOE of 20 h at 73% of conversion is obtained in the benzene hydrogenation. [Pg.269]

The catalytic lifetime was studied by reusing the aqueous phase for three successive hydrogenation runs of toluene, anisole and cresol. Similar turnover activities were observed during the successive runs. These results show the good stability of the catalytically active iridium suspension as previously described with rhodium nanoparticles. [Pg.273]

Finally, these aqueous suspensions of rhodium(O) and iridium(O) are the most efficient systems for the hydrogenation of a large variety of mono-, di-substituted and/or functionalized arene derivatives. Moreover, in our approach, the reaction mixture forms a typical two-phase system with an aqueous phase containing the nanoparticle catalyst able to be easily reused in a recycling process. [Pg.273]

Finally, Jessop and coworkers describe an organometalhc approach to prepare in situ rhodium nanoparticles [78]. The stabilizing agent is the surfactant tetrabutylammonium hydrogen sulfate. The hydrogenation of anisole, phenol, p-xylene and ethylbenzoate is performed under biphasic aqueous/supercritical ethane medium at 36 °C and 10 bar H2. The catalytic system is poorly characterized. The authors report the influence of the solubility of the substrates on the catalytic activity, p-xylene was selectively converted to czs-l,4-dimethylcyclohexane (53% versus 26% trans) and 100 TTO are obtained in 62 h for the complete hydrogenation of phenol, which is very soluble in water. [Pg.274]

In the early work on the thermolysis of metal complexes for the synthesis of metal nanoparticles, the precursor carbonyl complex of transition metals, e.g., Co2(CO)8, in organic solvent functions as a metal source of nanoparticles and thermally decomposes in the presence of various polymers to afford polymer-protected metal nanoparticles under relatively mild conditions [1-3]. Particle sizes depend on the kind of polymers, ranging from 5 to >100 nm. The particle size distribution sometimes became wide. Other cobalt, iron [4], nickel [5], rhodium, iridium, rutheniuim, osmium, palladium, and platinum nanoparticles stabilized by polymers have been prepared by similar thermolysis procedures. Besides carbonyl complexes, palladium acetate, palladium acetylacetonate, and platinum acetylac-etonate were also used as a precursor complex in organic solvents like methyl-wo-butylketone [6-9]. These results proposed facile preparative method of metal nanoparticles. However, it may be considered that the size-regulated preparation of metal nanoparticles by thermolysis procedure should be conducted under the limited condition. [Pg.367]

The size of the metal particles deposited from SMA is strongly dependent on the stabilization of the metal mi-croclusters present in the starting SMA solutions. Their stability can be conveniently modulated by addition of suitable ligands. Examples related to y-Al203-supported Platinum and Rhodium nanoparticles are reported here. [Pg.445]

NMR measurements are very useful to understand the properties of the stabilizing reagents of metal nanoparticles. Author s group reported the structure of stabilization of non-ionic and cationic surfactants on platinum nanoparticles [22] and that of ternary amines on rhodium nanoparticles [23]. Such information is considerably important for applications of nanoparticles such as... [Pg.455]

When the rhodium-catalyzed reaction is performed under a high pressure of CO in the presence of phosphite ligands, aldehyde products (159) are formed by insertion of CO into the rhodium-alkyl bond followed by reductive elimination (Eq. 31) [90]. The bimetallic catalysts were immobilized as nanoparticles, giving the same products and functional group tolerance, with the advantage that the catalyst could be recovered and reused without loss of... [Pg.249]

Laska, U., Frost, C.G., Plucinski, P.K. and Price, G.J. (2008) Rhodium containing magnetic nanoparticles effective catalysts for hydrogenation and the 1 4-addition of boronic acids. Catalysis Letters, 122 (1-2), 68-75. [Pg.86]

Rhodium-catalyzed enantioselective hydrogenation of acctamido -cinnamic in water was also achieved using pyrphos bound to poly-acrylic acid as ligand.337 Roucoux described some Rh° nanoparticles which function as reusable hydrogenation catalyst for arene derivatives in a biphasic water-liquid system.338... [Pg.120]

The first rhodium-catalyzed reductive cyclization of enynes was reported in I992.61,61a As demonstrated by the cyclization of 1,6-enyne 37a to vinylsilane 37b, the rhodium-catalyzed reaction is a hydrosilylative transformation and, hence, complements its palladium-catalyzed counterpart, which is a formal hydrogenative process mediated by silane. Following this seminal report, improved catalyst systems were developed enabling cyclization at progressively lower temperatures and shorter reaction times. For example, it was found that A-heterocyclic carbene complexes of rhodium catalyze the reaction at 40°C,62 and through the use of immobilized cobalt-rhodium bimetallic nanoparticle catalysts, the hydrosilylative cyclization proceeds at ambient temperature.6... [Pg.506]

A hydrosilylation/cyclization process forming a vinylsilane product need not begin with a diyne, and other unsaturation has been examined in a similar reaction. Alkynyl olefins and dienes have been employed,97 and since unlike diynes, enyne substrates generally produce a chiral center, these substrates have recently proved amenable to asymmetric synthesis (Scheme 27). The BINAP-based catalyst employed in the diyne work did not function in enyne systems, but the close relative 6,6 -dimethylbiphenyl-2,2 -diyl-bis(diphenylphosphine) (BIPHEMP) afforded modest yields of enantio-enriched methylene cyclopentane products.104 Other reported catalysts for silylative cyclization include cationic palladium complexes.105 10511 A report has also appeared employing cobalt-rhodium nanoparticles for a similar reaction to produce racemic product.46... [Pg.809]

Delmas et al. produced PVP-stabilized rhodium nanoparticles using the method reported by Hirai [32] to perform catalytic hydrogenation of oct-l-ene in a two-liquid-phase system [40]. These authors investigated the effect of various parameters on nanoparticle stability and activity under more or less severe conditions. It was also shown that PVP/Rh colloids could be reused twice or more, without any loss of activity. [Pg.221]

The liquid-phase hydrogenation of various terminal and internal alkynes under mild conditions was largely described with metal nanoparticles deposited/in-corporated in inorganic materials [83, 84], although several examples of selective reduction achieved by stabilized palladium, platinum or rhodium colloids have been reported in the literature. [Pg.238]

Catalytic studies and kinetic investigations of rhodium nanoparticles embedded in PVP in the hydrogenation of phenylacetylene were performed by Choukroun and Chaudret [90]. Nanoparticles of rhodium were used as heterogeneous catalysts (solventless conditions) at 60 °C under a hydrogen pressure of 7 bar with a [catalyst]/[substrate] ratio of 3800. Total hydrogenation to ethylbenzene was observed after 6 h of reaction, giving rise to a TOF of 630 h 1. The kinetics of the hydrogenation was found to be zero-order with respect to the al-kyne compound, while the reduction of styrene to ethylbenzene depended on the concentration of phenylacetylene still present in solution. Additional experi-... [Pg.239]

Recently, Dupont and coworkers described the use of room-temperature imi-dazolium ionic liquids for the formation and stabilization of transition-metal nanoparticles. The potential interest in the use of ionic liquids is to promote a bi-phasic organic-organic catalytic system for a recycling process. The mixture forms a two-phase system consisting of a lower phase which contains the nanocatalyst in the ionic liquid, and an upper phase which contains the organic products. Rhodium and iridium [105], platinum [73] or ruthenium [74] nanoparticles were prepared from various salts or organometallic precursors in dry 1-bu-tyl-3-methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate (BMI PF6) ionic liquid under hydrogen pressure (4 bar) at 75 °C. Nanoparticles with a mean diameter of 2-3 nm... [Pg.243]

Finally, these particles generated in ionic liquids are efficient nanocatalysts for the hydrogenation of arenes, although the best performances were not obtained in biphasic liquid-liquid conditions. The main importance of this system should be seen in terms of product separation and catalyst recycling. An interesting alternative is proposed by Kou and coworkers [107], who described the synthesis of a rhodium colloidal suspension in BMI BF4 in the presence of the ionic copolymer poly[(N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone)-co-(l-vinyl-3-butylimidazolium chloride)] as protective agent. The authors reported nanoparticles with a mean diameter of ca. 2.9 nm and a TOF of 250 h-1 in the hydrogenation of benzene at 75 °C and under 40 bar H2. An impressive TTO of 20 000 is claimed after five total recycles. [Pg.244]

An alternative approach to stabilize nanoparticles is to use polyoxoanions (see Scheme 9.5). Finke and coworkers described polyoxoanion- and ammonium-stabilized rhodium zerovalent nanoclusters for the hydrogenation of classical benzene compounds [95, 108]. This organometallic approach allows reproducible preparation of stable nanoparticles starting from a well-defined complex in terms of composition and structure (see Section 9.3.5). [Pg.244]

A new class of heterogeneous catalyst has emerged from the incorporation of mono- and bimetallic nanocolloids in the mesopores of MCM-41 or via the entrapment of pro-prepared colloidal metal in sol-gel materials [170-172], Noble metal nanoparticles containing Mex-MCM-41 were synthesized using surfactant stabilized palladium, iridium, and rhodium nanoparticles in the synthesis gel. The materials were characterized by a number of physical methods, showed that the nanoparticles were present inside the pores of MCM-41. They were found to be active catalysts in the hydrogenation of cyclic olefins such as cyclohexene, cyclooctene, cyclododecene, and... [Pg.82]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.314 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.499 ]




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Rhodium nanoparticles

Rhodium nanoparticles

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